FlyingGoose
Well-Known Member
post 21Where are you getting info from that Premier are giving discounts? What discounts are they offering and to whom?
Added
Premier Marinas any Bertholder rebates?
post 21Where are you getting info from that Premier are giving discounts? What discounts are they offering and to whom?
Fingers crossed , the Welcome trust do not buy Marinas becauset they make a shoe string profit , they buy profitable easy money businesses to support there workI read that as they are looking at doing "something" depending on various things but then go on to say their parent company is the Welcome Trust and therefore their profits go to treatments for virus
Maybe in the future berth holders could fill in a gift aid declaration![]()
I'm not defending marinas but I'm sure if you as a customer approached your marina and told them you had lost your job you can't make your monthly payment for 3 months or whatever (providing you've been a good customer) I would hope they would allow you a payment holiday.
I very nearly emailed my club to ask them not to cash my cheque if possible as my job isn't as secure as I was lead to believe but luckily at just over £200 for the year I thought I had the money and might as well get it out of the way. I wouldn't take my boat somewhere else because I didn't get chance to go sailing and kept it there anyway. It would certainly cost me more in the long run.
If my contract ran out and I wasn't renewing it I would certainly protest on paying any more if the marina stopped me taking my boat but it's a very dodgy area, marine law so I would tread carefully. I would class being evicted from the marina as an essential reason to move the boat if tgey allowed me to remove it.
I imagine marinas make their money from visitors and services, lift outs, masts etc, berths just cover the base. Again I'm not defending them, and offering x amount rebate from next year is a good loyalty strategy the truth is if you can't afford it then maybe you're living beyond your means?
OK, so it’s not strictly comparable but the wages bill for the holiday village I’m a director of is about 20% of the annual budget. We've furloughed one member of staff but the remainder are either working from home or at work. So the savings due to reduced labour costs are minimal (80% of one manual worker). Virtually all of the remaining costs are fixed, although we may be able to get a refund from our waste disposal company. And we’re not servicing any significant loans. I don’t see marinas as being much different except that they’re likely to have significant debts to service, so I don’t see where any refunds are going to come from.
With all due respect, if you’re worried about £200 for a year’s club fees, then perhaps you’re the one living beyond your means?
I have enough savings to see me through, thank you for your concern. The question was, however, why aren’t marinas offering discounts when the service they provide is not accessible at the moment, and their costs (wages costs at least) are clearly less than they would usually be.
I do apologise my reply to this thread was not a personal reply to you but generally (I maybe didn't make that clear enough), no need to get personal towards me. I'm quite happy to admit I'm a shoestring sailor, but I sail within my means my boat can be kept for a year on a weeks pay at minimum wage. Thank you for your concern , but with 2 small children and a wife on maternity I was worried I would loose my job of 17 years (before the government retention scheme) and that money may have come in handy (and my club I'm sure would have been willing to allow a late/part payment), not that I should have to explain myself to you.
My point being in my first reply was you're still using the marina to park your boat, if anyone was getting into financial difficulties then maybe a personal call would buy them some leeway. I'm sure most people choose a marina for convenience so by moving your boat to another may cost you more even if it's just fuel/time.
I did say that a rebate is a good loyalty strategy from the marinas and maybe people may move to a marina that "looked after" their clients better during these times. We are still using the space wherever it is and however much it costs, it's not the marinas thats stopping us sailing it's the government.
I do sympathise with people in Kelpie's position, they shouldn't be forced to pay more if they had never planned/contracted to stop. Again as I said marine law is a dodgy one, holding debts on boats etc as in theory they're still using the marina services. I would certainly be writing a letter stating I wish to remove my boat on day x and if they hold my boat they do so at their cost but I'm not sure how that would play out. However I'm not sure I would be welcome back at that marina if I planned on using it next winter. I know of one commercial operator moving 2 boats in tow last week, so maybe this may be an option?
Unfortunately we're all going through difficult times and just because we can't do something we may have wanted to do doesn't mean we're not using services. Many boats sit unmoved in marinas year round but they're still filling a gap and paying for it.
Yes Good PR. Well done premier marinas. I don't want to have my boat at premier marina, nor do I want it at Haslar. Outside the top marinas are a host of smaller marinas and boatyards. Bit more character, independants. Dont have the Tee shirts, but and I emphasise might offer a bit more charm. Of course location is very important too. They may not need to offer discounts not having to fill 300 berths. they might not have a lot of cash to hand out. they might be bloody tight. but regardless its going to be a gesture of goodwill.
Steveeasy
I am exploring ways of making sure that our berthing fees during this period are fair to all berth holders. To do this, we need greater clarity on the extent of Government assistance that is available and a better understanding of how long the restrictions preventing you from using your boat will persist.
Apologies for being a bit rude, i'd just woken from a very uncomfortable night in a tent in the garden with my 6 year old.
I'm in exactly the same situation as Kelpie, except with I have two boats, having bought a new one (to me) at precisely the wrong time! I had planned to take both boats to their summer homes (much cheaper), but am now stuck in the more expensive marina. I'm also in the same situation as you, but with three boys to entertain in a very modest garden, that now resembles a landfill site.
It is what it is, we will have to endure. I apologise for the post and wish you all the best......the Ballad is such a pretty boat.
Is paying a delivery skipper to move her a possibility?I'm in a slightly different position- I was going to move the boat to my own mooring (cost= zero) for the summer. But she is now trapped in a marina with only a few weeks left on my berth contract. I never planned or budgeted for a summer berth, and of course nobody knows how long I will need the berth for.
Is paying a delivery skipper to move her a possibility?
Ah, yes, bit of a non-starter that.Sadly I don't see that resolving the issue- the boat is in Stornoway, I'm on Skye ...